Recruits wearing black jerseys during their visit to Athens is nothing new, however. 2016 signee David Marshall was pictured in a black jersey in January shortly before signing with the Bulldogs. Recruits also wore black jerseys on campus several times in the past few years under Mark Richt.

Georgia hasn’t worn an alternate jersey since falling to Boise State 35-21 in the 2011 Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game while wearing the highly controversial Nike Pro Combat uniforms. The last time the Bulldogs utilized black jerseys was in 2008 when Alabama came to Athens and rolled over the Bulldogs 41-30.

Although jerseys and uniforms don’t have an effect the outcome of a game, Georgia has a 2-1 record when wearing black jerseys, the two wins coming over Auburn in 2007 and Hawaii in the 2008 Sugar Bowl.

KJ Britt, who sent out the first tweet posted above, also tweeted the following:

I love the black jerseys and think that Kirby Smart should implement them in a scheduled or predetermined manner. No surprises, just say “hey, we like the black jerseys and we’re going to wear them against Tech” or “we’re going to wear the black jerseys every home game that kicks off at night.” Or do like they did last year and set “Black Out” and “Red Out” games prior to the season.

For reference, here is Georgia’s recent history wearing alternate uniforms:

2007

Georgia first wore black jerseys at home in a 45-20 thumping of Auburn. It was the first “blackout” game under Richt. Richt called for a blackout again for the Sugar Bowl against Hawaii on Jan. 1, 2008.

2008

With Alabama in town, the Bulldogs again called for a blackout and wore their black jerseys. The Crimson Tide went up 31-0 on the Dawgs at the half and eventually won 41-30.

2009

Against Florida in Jacksonville, the Dawgs wore a uniform with black helmets (red facemask/white stripe/traditional “G” logo), white jerseys with black numbers, and black pants. The Gators rolled over the Bulldogs 41-17.